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t\ What's Cooking - With Jennie? Mother's Day Brunch Menu Easy Cheese Fondue Asparagus Ham Rolls Ambrosia Salad Coffee May 9, 1985-Fort Covington Sun-Fort Covinqton , N.Y.-Pagc 5 SRGS French Club Students Travel to France Sunday is Mother's Day. Somehow the picture of Dad and the kids preparing brakfast for Mom is always the first thought which pops into my head when I think about it. Must be advertising propa- ganda because I can't remember ever having had it done for me, but if this is some- thing you would like to try, here are some elegant, but easy recipes which would make a terrific brunch menu for Moth- er's Day feasting. ASPARAGUS HAM ROLLS 16 stalks cooked asparagus 4 thin slices boiled ham Hollandaise sauce (from a mix) Roll 4 stalks of asparagus in each ham slice. Secure with toothpicks. Place in a broiler, 3\ from heat. Broil for 5 min- utes, turn and broil on the other side. Serve with Hollandaise sauce. You might mix up this easy fondue dish — it can be done the night before or about an hour before you need it. After it is baked, remove to a warm spot and broil the ham rolls. EASY CHEESE FONDUE 4 slices of bread, cut in half and buttered 1 cup cheese, cut in small pieces < * < 2 tsp. dry mustard 2 eggs, well beaten 2 cups milk l 2 tsp. salt % tsp. pepper Place bread in a shallow oblong baking dish, 8 x 12\. Spread cheese over bread; sprinkle with mustard. Mix egg, milk, salt and pepper; pour over bread. Bake 30 minutes in a 350 degree oven, or until puffy and brown. With this you can serve a fruit salad. You can make a fruit salad by cutting up fruit, sprinkle with a little sugar and lemon juice, or it can be done by starting the night before with a homemade fruit dressing to complete the Ambrosia salad. AMBROSIA SALAD Combine cut up orange sec tions, diced apple, banana sli- ces with Fruit Juice dressing. TOD with coconut. FRUIT JUICE DRESSING 1 cup strained canned fruit juice \>2 cup orange juice i 4 cup lemon juice 1 tbsp. each of grated lemon rind and orange rind 1 egg slightly beaten Mix together; cook over low heat, stirring constantly until it boils. Remove from heat and chill thoroughly. If you decide that preparing brunch for Mom is a bit more than you can manage, you will have to settle for taking her out for dinner since the local eating establishments usually don't gear up for Sunday brunch on Mother's Day. By Meg^Stacey, Suzanne and Jeff On April 6, a small group of students consisting of Meg McElwain, Stacey Cun- ningham, Suzanne Seidel and Jeff Durkee along with their chaperone, Miss Heidi Somers, embarked on a trip which was to be filled with fun and learning experiences. Our group, along with to other groups of students from Maine and Maryland, toured much of northwestern France and Paris. While staying in Angers, a small city near the Atlantic coast, all of the stu- dents had a chance to visit the Cathedral of Chartres, the Castle of Angers, Mont. St. Michel (which is a small island city built within great granite walls), the wine cellars of Sau mer (with its three hundred year old caverns which contain over five million bottles of spar kling wine), and the beautiful countryside of the Loire River Valley. We also visited the trendy tourist area of St. Malo for a short sight-seeing and shopping excursion. St. Malo is a beautiful walled city right on the beach of the English Chan nel in the Normandy region. After our departure from Angers, we visited three of the (L-R) Meg McElwain, Ms. Heidi Somers, Jeff Durkee, Stacey Cun- ningham and Suzanne Seidel over 300 chateaus in the Loire Valley. Azay le-Rideau and Chenonceaux were both very beautiful but the overall favor ite was the royal Chateaux of Chambord. Designed by Leo nardo deVinci, this magificent dwelling was never inhabited but stands as a fantastic national landmark and show case for period architecture. After our arrival in Paris, we went to the Palace of Versailles. The home of Louis XIV and the center of European culture dur ing the seventeenth century. Syracuse Symphony \Pops\ In Town By Jennie Bartlett Last week the Malone Arts Council finished up it's 84-85 Performance Series with the presentation of the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra under the direction of SSO's resident conductor, Calvin Custer. Area music enthusiasts who failed to mark the date on their calendar miss two hours of pure enjoyment. The 350 to 400 people who attended the concert in the 900 seat Malone Junior High School auditorium seemed a pitifully small audience. Malone Arts Council personnel stated that about 110 Series ticket holders were, in attendance for the final concert. I asked Kenneth Steiger, the assistant executive director for the SSO if playing to a small audience had an£ effect on the 66 touring musicians who make up the pops orchestra. He assured me that, although they normally play to a fuller house, the members of the group love to perform and the size of the audience is, in no way, any type of let down. However, some of the talking and suppressed laughter going on between orchestra members let me believe they weren't taking the evening too seriously. I was let down. There had been an opportunity to hear almost two hours of good music in our own backyard and airodl Rsmpers DISCOUNT COUPON USERS SAVE — Hundreds of dollars per year on . your food and drugstore purchases. Receive the wanted discount coupons of your choice. FOR FREE INFO Send a stamped and self-addressed envelope to \The Coupon Club\ 7908 W. Mill Road Milwaukee, WI 53218 You must enclose an envelope with a stamp on it addressed to yourself. a relatively few bothered to take advantage of it. \Not my kind of music,\ you might say. You might have been sur- prised. For non classical music lovers the first two offeringswho could have been rather long and boring, but with the pres entation of Strauss waltzes and polka, things picked up, along with the tempo. After intermission, the \Bachanale\ was t v he least interesting, but on the heels of that presentation came \West Side Story\ \Pink Panther\ a slightly overlong \Broadway Salute\ with an exciting \Jesus Christ Superstar\ as the finale. As an encore the SSO pres- ented \Rodeo Hoedown\. Even if classical music isn't your thing, more than two thirds of the concert would have been most enjoyable. However, if you, as |, enjoy classical music, every second in 1986. Although the musicians have a long tenure with the orches tra, there are vacancies. First choice usually goes to someone has been playing with the orchestra on a part time basis. Then follow local auditions and national auditions, ensuring that the very best musicians available will be secured. From Malone the SSO was travelling to Old Forge and Booneville. Most of their out of town concerts, however, are regional and are held in Water town, Rome, Uswego, ttuourn and Ithaca: Christopher Reene, Music Director with the SSO since the 75 76 season departed dur ing the 83-84 season, leaving the task of finding a new con ductor to the SSO Search Committee. After two years and nine guest conductors, Mr. Steiger stated that it was of the presentation would have expected that an announce been pleasurable. ment naming the new Music The musicians who make up Director would be forthcoming the Syracuse Symphony in four to six weeks. The Syracuse Symphony Orchestra isn't scheduled for the 85-86 concert series anchthe opportunity has passed. How ever, Betty Coughlin unveiled the proposed agenda foiMhe next series and, regardless o( Orchestra perform about 300 times a year. The entire orches tra performs abut 104 times, which when held in the Civic Center in Syracuse, increases rn size by some twenty two musicians. These are primarily strings which are required for what kind of music you like, the classical repertoire which take note. There just might be the larger facility can easily accomodate. From the core of the orchestra there are three string ensembles, two brass quintets, a percussion group, a rock ensemble and a baroque ensemble. These special groups are responsible for an additional 175 concerts each year. Most of the musicians who play with the SSO have been something you could kick yourself for having missed. Mother's Day Dance p with the orchestra ten to twenty years and some as long as the orchestra* itself, has been in existence. The SSO will celebrate it's 25th anniversary Mothers Day Dance May 11 from 9 till 1 a.m. Town Hall Waddington, Music the Brandy» Creek Band B.Y.O.B. set ups available. Food and refresh- ments on sale; door prizes, drawings. Donations $3.00 sin- gle $5.00 couples. Sponsors: Northern Ramblers C. B. & Campers Club, Inc. We were brought through and given explanations for 40 out of the 400 rooms of the palace and saw the world famous gardens, although the weather pre vented us from any extensive viewing. While in Paris, we also saw the Sacre-Coeur, Notre Dame, the Palace of Chaillot, the Eiffel Tower, Saint Chap pelle, Les Invalides, the Arc of Triumph, the Champs Elysees, Pompidon Center; and Les Halles. Everyone has a really good time and acquired some new pen pals from the other groups. The students also learned a great deal about a country we have bec>n studying for a long time. But maybe even more excit ing than all of the sightseeing was the fact that we expe rienced the French culture. While in France, we were exposed to french foods and we even sipped the famous french wines. We also had the chance to actually speak the french Ian guage that we have been study ing for so long to the native peoples. At first, we were shy and timid but to our surprise, they understood us! For us, it was the greatest triumph of all. To carry on a conversation with a French person and to be both understood and to com prehend is a marvelous feelin g...onewewill fondly remember for the rest of our lives. Am. Cancer Soc: Auction Friday evening', May 10th has been set for the date of the Auction*to benefit the Franklin County Unit of the American Cancer Society The Auction will begin at 6:00 pm and will be held at the Amvets on the Whippleville Road. Dick Cook is auctioneer. Terry Dupuis is Chairman qf this event. Because the American Cancer Society is a non-profit organization, all contributions are tax deductible for their fair market value. The American Cancel Society and the Amvets invite you to stay for an evening ol dancing starting at 9:30 to the music of the Busco Bandits..